It's in the Apple Store, so I'd say no. If I remember right, Amazon's been trying to get it in for a while.

I wouldn't be surprised if the threat of a lawsuit/anti-trust action finally forced Apple to let it in.Either way, as long as Apple and Amazon are competing openly, I'm ok with it.

I prefer Amazon Video over iTunes because you can play it from a browser on a PC/laptop and don't need a special app for it.

It's also broadly supported when it comes to streaming devices for your HDTV. Roku, Xbox, and PS3 all have apps for it. Amazon is also nice because they combine the cheap streaming library of Netflix with the instant gratification of iTunes or Redbox. Their daily deals on movie rentals are also nice. I just grabbed HD rentals of Sherlock Holmes: Game of Shadows, Friends with Kids, and 21 Jump Street for $2 each today.

Mad_Radhu:Insane_Cellist: MacEnvy: RexTalionis: Hey, Amazon - we want an app for Android! You already have an Android APK for the Kindle, just port it over for the rest of us.

Don't worry, you can already use it on the Fire. Or are we not claiming that's an Android tablet unless we're arguing about sales figures?

/flamebait

I wouldn't mind the app being Fire only as much if the thing had an HDMI port

The Fire downloads and streams are barely DVD quality, so an HDMI output wouldn't be very good quality. You're better off with a cheap Roku if you want to stream to a TV.

I got a Blackberry Playbook for free when it came out, and it was just about worthless for entertainment purposes until Amazon started up the streaming in HD, which worked flawlessly for a few months before Amazon killed it to force people to buy Kindle Fires.

This is all the more ironic because Amazon used the reference build of the Playbook for the Kindle Fire.

Someone at Blackberry must have really pissed off someone at Amazon, because I was at a conference where an Amazon VP announced a Kindle App for the Playbook (before it launched). Not only has that app not materialized, Amazon is doing it's best to make the browser version of the reader incompatible on the Playbook, in addition to the video streaming block.

They've had the Kindle app for both iOS and Mac for several years. Once again, reality trumps your anti-Apple brainwashing.

I'm reasonably sure he was joking.

I was under the impression that Amazon and Apple were fighting over the Amazon app. I thought Apple wanted 30% of whatever Amazon sold via their app which Amazon didn't really like.

Apple has been accepting third-party apps that feature a competing product as long as they either get 30% of the price or there is no way to sell that competing product from within the app. None of the Amazon digital apps have any way to buy their product from within the app; you have to go to the website directly.

"Whispersync for Instant Video keeps track of your progress in a piece of content, and syncs a video placeholder with other devices tied to your account. So, if you're at a pivotal scene during a Doctor Who episode and you stop the video, you can pick up where you left off on another device that supports Amazon Instant Video"

Because remembering whether you stopped at the 15:20 point or the 22:38 point is hard

This is a good thing, in a way.If tablets become app/music/cloud store neutral, Apple no longer has a lock on the market and it becomes all about who can make the fastest and cheapest tablets. Anyone can build a device that accesses any store.

/Not exactly what's happening./Amazon is opening its own store in Apple turf./Still hopeful.

way south:This is a good thing, in a way.If tablets become app/music/cloud store neutral, Apple no longer has a lock on the market and it becomes all about who can make the fastest and cheapest tablets. Anyone can build a device that accesses any store.

Cloudchaser Sakonige the Red Wolf:"Whispersync for Instant Video keeps track of your progress in a piece of content, and syncs a video placeholder with other devices tied to your account. So, if you're at a pivotal scene during a Doctor Who episode and you stop the video, you can pick up where you left off on another device that supports Amazon Instant Video"

Because remembering whether you stopped at the 15:20 point or the 22:38 point is hard

What a stupid thing to biatch about.

If you're in the middle of a TV show or movie and have to shut it off and walk away for whatever reason for however long, do you honestly remember, "I was at the 92:16 mark?" If so, good for you. But even still, are you saying it's not at all convienent to click the "Resume" button and have the video start up instantly from that point, rather than have to recall the exact time you stopped, start play, then skip up to that point? Not to mention the fact that works across any device to which your account is attached.

theurge14:way south: This is a good thing, in a way.If tablets become app/music/cloud store neutral, Apple no longer has a lock on the market and it becomes all about who can make the fastest and cheapest tablets. Anyone can build a device that accesses any store.

change1211:theurge14: way south: This is a good thing, in a way.If tablets become app/music/cloud store neutral, Apple no longer has a lock on the market and it becomes all about who can make the fastest and cheapest tablets. Anyone can build a device that accesses any store.

When did that happen?

Read the bold section.

Yes, and I was wondering why Apple was singled out when Google Play only works on Android devices and Marketplace on works on Windows Phone.

theurge14:change1211: theurge14: way south: This is a good thing, in a way.If tablets become app/music/cloud store neutral, Apple no longer has a lock on the market and it becomes all about who can make the fastest and cheapest tablets. Anyone can build a device that accesses any store.

When did that happen?

Read the bold section.

Yes, and I was wondering why Apple was singled out when Google Play only works on Android devices and Marketplace on works on Windows Phone.

Perhaps the apps/music/cloud part really is the product?

/Razor blades for a Mach 3//Inkjet cartridges...

I am biased against Apple because they are the market leader and I own one of their tablets (and its a good tablet, I won't deny that).The problem I have is the app software store has locked me in. If I switch tablets for something cheaper or faster, I lose access to a hundred bucks worth of stuff. If I switch from that tablet to a future apple product, I cant use the other stuff.Compare that to a PC where I can use stuff that was written in the 90's and still runs just fine.

If the stores work across all devices, the customer can pick the store with the stuff he wants and the tablet design that works best.

/This probably wont happen, but a man can dream./I might as well ask for games to be compatible on different consoles.

I'm not sold on Cloud computing or networking at all. It just seems like hooking your house up to a mini-Skynet. Sure, I'd love to have my phone/computer/tablet/refrigerator/TV/microwave/AC all connected to the Cloud, until some douchebag net hacker from Singapore creates a worm that infects and crashes everything connected to it, or worse, gains access to all the information and shared files and steals all of your account info.

ScreamingHangover:Either way, as long as Apple and Amazon are competing openly, I'm ok with it.

It is a shame the reverse isn't true, we won't see iTunes on the Fire. Not for any locked down walled garden reasons but because it's just not something I can see Apple doing. Which is a pity because I live with this fanciful notion that one day someone will write a widget that makes an Android phone pretend to be an iPhone as far as the Mac it's connected to is concerned (i.e. it syncs without kludges).

Nope. The cloud is this bubbles version of the dot com, it's the one stop shop for to fix your every problem. Now issues with this in the corporate space aside a consumer is faced with a much more irksome prospect, residential internet. It's usually asynchonus bandwidth and the upstream is very weak compared to the down... you're kinda going to need it beefy both ways if you want to edit your video and be all "to the cloud!" (FU Win7 adverts, FU) at the same time... yeah.

If the majority had this Google Fibre (and similar speeds from other services) and assuming it's duplex then yeah it'd all work wonderfully. But when you're on a 2Mbp/s upstream trying to edit the 3GB video of granny's birthday without local software you'll be wondering where it all went wrong.

I'd ear mark such time as being a decade away, just like fusion power plants.

way south:theurge14: change1211: theurge14: way south: This is a good thing, in a way.If tablets become app/music/cloud store neutral, Apple no longer has a lock on the market and it becomes all about who can make the fastest and cheapest tablets. Anyone can build a device that accesses any store.

When did that happen?

Read the bold section.

Yes, and I was wondering why Apple was singled out when Google Play only works on Android devices and Marketplace on works on Windows Phone.

Perhaps the apps/music/cloud part really is the product?

/Razor blades for a Mach 3//Inkjet cartridges...

I am biased against Apple because they are the market leader and I own one of their tablets (and its a good tablet, I won't deny that).The problem I have is the app software store has locked me in. If I switch tablets for something cheaper or faster, I lose access to a hundred bucks worth of stuff. If I switch from that tablet to a future apple product, I cant use the other stuff.Compare that to a PC where I can use stuff that was written in the 90's and still runs just fine.

If the stores work across all devices, the customer can pick the store with the stuff he wants and the tablet design that works best.

/This probably wont happen, but a man can dream./I might as well ask for games to be compatible on different consoles.

As an ex-Windows user, I used to worry about the same thing. "What if I want to switch/how future-proof is my software/data?" Having been an Apple user the last 5 years, I no longer care about this, and wonder why I ever did. Why would I want to switch? I'm on a platform I love and never want to leave (I always used Windows out of necessity, and certainly never "loved" it). Even if I did want to switch, in 10 years or whatever in case the Apple experience goes down the tubes somehow, is it worth compromising my experience today for something that might never happen anyway?

I would even go so far as to say that Windows users typically worry about this, because who in the hell ever wants to commit to Windows? I was always unconciously looking for a way to get off Windows, I just never realized it until I found the thing I wanted to go to instead.

"Worry is like interest paid on a debt that never comes due." If you love the platform you're on, then buy into it and commit. The lack of worry is an unnecessary burden relieved.

karmachameleon:I would even go so far as to say that Windows users typically worry about this, because who in the hell ever wants to commit to Windows? I was always unconciously looking for a way to get off Windows, I just never realized it until I found the thing I wanted to go to instead.

We worry about what's going to happen with the stuff we spent our money on if we decide to switch, something Apple users don't really care about considering how much they flushed to get their hardware. I would be pissed right the **** off if Steam went down, as much as I would if I bought a new tablet and realized my hundreds in appstore purchases couldn't travel with it because of a closed OS.

way south:theurge14: change1211: theurge14: way south: This is a good thing, in a way.If tablets become app/music/cloud store neutral, Apple no longer has a lock on the market and it becomes all about who can make the fastest and cheapest tablets. Anyone can build a device that accesses any store.

When did that happen?

Read the bold section.

Yes, and I was wondering why Apple was singled out when Google Play only works on Android devices and Marketplace on works on Windows Phone.

Perhaps the apps/music/cloud part really is the product?

/Razor blades for a Mach 3//Inkjet cartridges...

I am biased against Apple because they are the market leader and I own one of their tablets (and its a good tablet, I won't deny that).The problem I have is the app software store has locked me in. If I switch tablets for something cheaper or faster, I lose access to a hundred bucks worth of stuff. If I switch from that tablet to a future apple product, I cant use the other stuff.Compare that to a PC where I can use stuff that was written in the 90's and still runs just fine.

If the stores work across all devices, the customer can pick the store with the stuff he wants and the tablet design that works best.

/This probably wont happen, but a man can dream./I might as well ask for games to be compatible on different consoles.

Depends on what sort of stuff you're talking about. I have an iPad, and a Nexus 7 tablet. As far as content (books, movies, and even music) I can access it on both systems. That is as long as the books, movies, and music is not purchased from Apple.Any books or movies I get from Google Play, I can access it on the iPad with the Google apps. I can of course also read any ebooks from Amazon or Barnes and Noble.

karmachameleon:way south: theurge14: change1211: theurge14: way south: This is a good thing, in a way.If tablets become app/music/cloud store neutral, Apple no longer has a lock on the market and it becomes all about who can make the fastest and cheapest tablets. Anyone can build a device that accesses any store.

When did that happen?

Read the bold section.

Yes, and I was wondering why Apple was singled out when Google Play only works on Android devices and Marketplace on works on Windows Phone.

Perhaps the apps/music/cloud part really is the product?

/Razor blades for a Mach 3//Inkjet cartridges...

I am biased against Apple because they are the market leader and I own one of their tablets (and its a good tablet, I won't deny that).The problem I have is the app software store has locked me in. If I switch tablets for something cheaper or faster, I lose access to a hundred bucks worth of stuff. If I switch from that tablet to a future apple product, I cant use the other stuff.Compare that to a PC where I can use stuff that was written in the 90's and still runs just fine.

If the stores work across all devices, the customer can pick the store with the stuff he wants and the tablet design that works best.

/This probably wont happen, but a man can dream./I might as well ask for games to be compatible on different consoles.

As an ex-Windows user, I used to worry about the same thing. "What if I want to switch/how future-proof is my software/data?" Having been an Apple user the last 5 years, I no longer care about this, and wonder why I ever did. Why would I want to switch? I'm on a platform I love and never want to leave (I always used Windows out of necessity, and certainly never "loved" it). Even if I did want to switch, in 10 years or whatever in case the Apple experience goes down the tubes somehow, is it worth compromising my experience today for something that might never happen anyway?

I would even go so far as to say that Windows users typically worry about this, because who in the hell ever wants to commit to Windows? I was always unconciously looking for a way to get off Windows, I just never realized it until I found the thing I wanted to go to instead.

"Worry is like interest paid on a debt that never comes due." If you love the platform you're on, then buy into it and commit. The lack of worry is an unnecessary burden relieved.

The hardest part about switching to Mac is feeling stupid for talking so much shiat about Macs. Just cover it up by blaming mountain lion's quality or retina displays or something. Apple has enough compelling stuff coming out all the time to justify switching.

Or you could blame the windows 8 preview or say you wanna make iphone apps. But act real sad about it.

UrCa:karmachameleon: I would even go so far as to say that Windows users typically worry about this, because who in the hell ever wants to commit to Windows? I was always unconciously looking for a way to get off Windows, I just never realized it until I found the thing I wanted to go to instead.

We worry about what's going to happen with the stuff we spent our money on if we decide to switch, something Apple users don't really care about considering how much they flushed to get their hardware. I would be pissed right the **** off if Steam went down, as much as I would if I bought a new tablet and realized my hundreds in appstore purchases couldn't travel with it because of a closed OS.

And what are the chances either Apple or Steam are going to go under any time soon, forcing a move? Answer: not worth worrying about. Seriously.